Wheels (Australia)

BULL RUSH

TWO EPIC TOURS, 40 YEARS APART, ON SOME OF EUROPE’S FINEST ROADS

- WORDS MEL NICHOLS PHOTOS JOHN MASON

Re-creating 1976’s Convoy! with four decades of Lambo

LAST TIME, it started with a phone call and culminated in a story called Convoy! I wrote for CAR (the magazine I was editing in London) and Wheels’ sister magazine, Sports Car World. It told how four of us drove a Countach, Silhouette and Urraco flat out from the Lamborghin­i factory to England.

On a Thursday afternoon in October 1976, Roger Phillips, the UK’S Lamborghin­i importer, phoned to say he was flying to Italy with two pals (Steve Brazier and David Jolliffe) to collect three Lamborghin­is for the Earl’s Court Motor Show. If I got to Heathrow in two hours I could join in. At Sant’agata, we waited a day while the Silhouette was finished, then took off on a Saturday morning. We got into our stride at a steady 180km/h or so on the Autostrada del Sole up to Milano, and used the cars’ grunt to nipnip-nip past the trucks in the Aosta Valley up to the Mont Blanc Tunnel, and to clear the gaggles on the D roads beyond Geneva. At nightfall, after a struggling Citroen 2CV nearly took out the Silhouette, we stopped at a hotel near Nantua in France.

We fired up the Lamborghin­is at six the next morning. They were properly warm when we struck the D979 that swoops in and out of the River Ain valley. It’s the kind of road you dream about. And that day it was magical: mist turned the valley below us silver, and as we zoomed down we stayed nose-to-tail, windows open, relishing the thunder of a 4.0-litre V12 and two 3.0-litre V8s – 28 cylinders, 12 camshafts, 14 Webers and eight exhausts – bouncing off the banks in the still air. It was an anthemic prelude to the glories ahead.

When we picked up the A6 Autoroute du Soleil at Mâcon for the 730km run via Paris to Calais, Roger flattened the mighty Countach. Steve and I, in the Urraco and Silhouette, tried to stay with him but ran out of steam when their speedos touched 265km/h. The Countach thundered past a stationary motorbike cop and faded into the distance. The gendarme watched the little V8s go by too, then mounted up.

We stopped at the next service area. He pulled in, sauntered over, nodded hello and admired the cars. Two more bike cops did the same and then a group of gendarmes from a bus came over to look. Word was spreading, but we knew we were going to be okay. France was still without motorway speed limits and the cops’ demeanour said “fair enough, chaps”.

After breakfast, we accelerate­d away and gobbled the long, lazy curves where the A6 climbs through the Cote-d’or’s soft hills. While David was driving the Urraco, I took the picture of its speedo on 160mph (258km/h) from the passenger’s seat, with the Silhouette and Countach drifting along ahead. It was a surreal experience seeing those dramatic bronze-gold shapes glittering in the sun as they ate the empty pale grey ribbon of motorway and speared into the blue of that Sunday morning

When we switched off in London, we knew we’d experience­d something unique. Steve Brazier, who spent 56 years working with fast cars, says: “It was stunning; the best driving experience of my life.” Roger Phillips: “We were lucky to be in the right place at the right time. It was truly epic.”

blam – to whichever gear it decides is right. It always seems to be correct for stability through the bends, and optimum response coming out. For a while, I flick the paddles manually but, frankly, I can’t do it as fast or perfectly as the system itself. It is very different from driving an old-school manual like the Countach or SE30. Without time to shift so often, you stay in second or third and utilise the V12’s huge flexibilit­y and engine braking. Same in the V8s had they been here.

I’d been mindful of comments that early Huracans understeer­ed. With the Spyder’s introducti­on, Lamborghin­i recalibrat­ed the front-rear torque split. In Strada, the settings are still towards understeer but I’m not getting run-out at the nose. The grip at both ends matches the speed and power and the Huracan flows around accurately. In Sport, where Lamborghin­i anticipate­s a higher level of driver skill and desire for fun, the attitude will tighten to the verge of oversteer, and if there’s enough room and power the tail will move. But not much. Corsa delivers dogged neutrality for optimum cornering speed. The message I get is of a car that allows me to access as much of its prodigious power and capability as I wish, with supreme safety and dependabil­ity, to enjoy a thrilling drive, with my daughter beside me, on an exceptiona­l road.

Back in the bar, Nick Tranter reckons it was the best day’s driving he’d ever had. He’s discovered new aspects of his 386kw Diablo SE30. “Given the Diablo’s size, the thing that surprised me,” he says, “was how nimble it was through the hairpins and how quickly it restored balance under full power out of them. That huge whoomph of torque kicked in early and stayed there all the way to the limiter. Second’s versatilit­y was fantastic for accelerati­on and engine braking – so different from moderns like the Huracan or my Porsche 991 Turbo, which would have gone up several gears on the short straights too. It’s an analogue experience versus a digital experience.” Glenn Brooks in the Murcielago SV, with its paddle shifts, was using the gears more as he laid down all of his car’s 493kw and, not surprising­ly, found it just as soul-stirring.

The Silhouette and Urraco arrive and we leave next morning for the 390km run to Courmayeur. Top down (dropped in 17 seconds), the Spyder is a quiet, comfortabl­e, unbuffeted cruiser at 145-ish in the autostrada traffic. Near Courmayeur, we peel onto SS26, the serpentine road through La Thuile to the Piccolo San Bernardo Pass. High up, its bends are so compressed the Huracan’s speed is governed by how fast I can spin the wheel from lock to lock. There’s little feel in the electric steering but its variable ratio seems to match it to each

WITHOUT TIME TO SHIFT SO OFTEN, YOU STAY IN SECOND OR THIRD AND UTILISE THE V12’S HUGE FLEXIBILIT­Y

corner, with always enough lock on hand. In the tunnels on the way up and down, the rich orchestrat­ion of the V8s, V10 and V12s is an utter delight. Sant’agata has always understood that kind of music.

And so, next day, to the Gran San Bernardo. If you’ve never driven it, find a reason. Linger just past Saint-oyen where the old SS27 veers off the new T2 to the Tunnel. It’s here you’ll see the breathtaki­ng Dardanelli Viaduct which the Miura drove across so evocativel­y in The Italian Job. As we gaze down onto it from one of the SS27’S hairpins, the sound of Matt Monro singing ‘On Days Like These’ – from the film’s soundtrack – wafts down the hillside as Richard cranks up the volume on the Silhouette’s tape deck.

In the Countach on the way to the top, it is fascinatin­g to note the different feel and effect of two Lamborghin­is 30 years apart. The Huracan’s 5204cc V10 feels light and snappy as it revs. The QV’S 5167cc V12 might have 115kw and 58Nm less, but the brawniness and linearity of its pull is an addictive world all its own.

The QV’S rack and pinion, heavier than earlier Countachs’, demands muscle. The reward is fingertip fingertip-fulfilling feel. The brakes need comm commensura­te effort. As with the SE30, the Countach stays in that monumental seco second gear, and occasional­ly third, and works up and down its rev range. With a grin, Tadek says: “It’s certainly a driver’s car; you have to keep going to the gym to have the strength to drive it on an epic road like this.”

Glenn puts Alan Robb, who rates the Murcielago SV highly, into his SV for the climb. “In Corsa, I could lean on it and use the weight to set it up through the corners,” Al says gleefully. “Left foot braking kept it balanced, either using just the grip or pushing on to get the four-wheel drive to help. At one point, it was so eager and confidence-inspiring I went into fourth and took the following corners as fast as I dared. Savouring every new push of power from the V12 on the way to the redline on that road, with no traffic and perfect weather, goes down as one of my all-time great drives.” This journey is kind of like that.

On the Swiss side of the pass, the road is narrow and bumpy, and there’s often no guard rail. Someone jokes that if you went over the edge your clothes would be out of fashion before you hit the bottom. Towards Martigny the highway broadens into sequences of fast, open bends that are meat and drink to all the cars, but especially the V8s. They always were most impressive in these conditions. “The Silhouette is awesome on those sweepers and responds so well to being driven hard,” Richard reckons. “I needed to pinch myself: in front of me was a Urraco and behind me a Countach, and we are in the Alps.”

There are interestin­g difference­s and similariti­es between the Urraco and the Silhouette developed from it: lighter steering in the Urraco on convention­al Michelins against the Silhouette’s Pirelli P7s; meatier feel in the Silhouette, a lower driving position and tighter seats; in both, modest oomph from the 3.0-litre V8 to 3500rpm then a brisk climb to the 186kw power peak at 7500rpm.

Strong directiona­l stability, comfortabl­e ride and clean, dependable handling. Chris Notley, able to stretch his Urraco’s legs for the first time, says: “It surpassed our expectatio­ns. It’s an elegant, remarkably comfortabl­e and surprising­ly quick and economical sports grand tourer.” Our run finishes on the Route de la Forclaz/d1506 from Martigny to Chamonix, another cracker that provides the perfect ending to a perfect day.

And then it is the 1030km haul to Paris, with the D979 on the way. Now that you encounter barely a car or truck there, it’s hard to imagine how busy this road was

before the Autoroute des Titans bypassed it to and from the Mont Blanc Tunnel.

I throw the Huracan at it, and just as with the Silhouette in 1976, it bestows immeasurab­le pleasure. In Sport, I switch off the ESC and prod the V10 hard enough to make the tail creep in the tighter bends. But somehow that seems at odds with the nature of the Huracan.

It’s properly fast and its Piattaform­a Inerziale control system lets you access its pace with extraordin­ary ease. The three accelerome­ters and three gyroscopes shoot real-time high-speed data about roll, pitch and yaw to the ESC, AWD, dampers and steering systems. Lamborghin­i’s R&D boss Maurizio Reggiani says it lets the car get close to the point of no return while checking and controllin­g its attitude.

I like being able to drive as fast as I can with that kind of confidence, while having the option to switch off the ESC and get physical if I feel like playing.

Down this amazing road into the Ain Valley, there is an inhibitor though: under brakes to the apex in the tighter hairpins, the pan under the nose scrapes the bitumen. A dashboard switch lifts the height for car parks and speed humps.

There isn’t a time when the Spyder’s ride foregoes any comfort. With sunny weather all the way, the top is always down; at serious three figure speeds, the cabin remains calm. I never use the radio; roofdown, you want to hear nothing but the V10’s panoply of wicked tunes. Hours at the wheel aren’t tiring. The pedals in the righthand-drive cockpit are well aligned and the seat shape works well for my 176cm frame. But I do have the seat against the firewall, so taller drivers mightn’t be so comfortabl­e.

All this makes long stretches like the run up the A6 to Paris a pleasure. Loping along near Beaune, I smile when I see in the mirror a low, wide shape closing fast. It could only be an Espada. Richard and Lynne Bull’s immaculate Series III sweeps past. It is in its metier. Earlier in 1976, I’d tucked away 1700km in 11 hours in an Espada and know full well its ability on open roads.

After a night at Versailles, we have just the 300km run up the A16 to Calais. Again, we are lucky: once we clear Paris, there is little traffic and all of us can enjoy longlegged cars running freely.

While we wait for the Eurotunnel train, I go over the fuel consumptio­n. On the day that the trip computer said the Huracan had maxed at 268kph, its consumptio­n was 12.7L/100km. Overall, it is 12.1. Pretty impressive. Most of the crew agree it’s been their best week’s driving. With the original Convoy! trip in my memory bank, could I say that? This was a less intense experience with more variety in a different kind of Lamborghin­i. Far more powerful than even the Countach, very much faster, and notably more refined – and with a touch of the Urraco’s sweetness – the Huracan Spyder gave me a week of total, unalloyed joy. I only wish it had a bigger boot in the nose for more than two small carry-ons, and better cabin storage. It’s so liveable in every other way, an admirable combinatio­n of grand tourer and hillclimb eater.

When I switch off in London after 2345km, I’m left with nothing but a hunger to drive it more. The other drivers feel the same about their cars

It’s been a hell of a week.

ROOF DOWN, YOU WANT TO HEAR NOTHING BUT THE V10’S PANOPLY OF WICKED TUNES

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 ??  ?? OCTOBER 1976, ON THE ORIGINAL CONVOY! DRIVE, DOING 258KM/H IN A LAMBO URRACO. BACK THEN, FRENCH MOTORWAYS DIDN’T HAVE SPEED LIMITS...
OCTOBER 1976, ON THE ORIGINAL CONVOY! DRIVE, DOING 258KM/H IN A LAMBO URRACO. BACK THEN, FRENCH MOTORWAYS DIDN’T HAVE SPEED LIMITS...
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 ??  ?? COUNTACH (EXIT) AND SILHOUETTE (APEX) DEPARTED FROM URRACO’S BULL NAMING CONVENTION
COUNTACH (EXIT) AND SILHOUETTE (APEX) DEPARTED FROM URRACO’S BULL NAMING CONVENTION
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